Theosophy Generally Stated
From the Official Report, World's Parliament of Religions, 1893
THE claim is made that an impartial study of history, religion and literature
will show the existence from ancient times of a great body of philosophical,
scientific and ethical doctrine forming the basis and origin of all similar
thought in modern systems. It is at once religious and scientific, asserting
that religion and science should never be separated. It puts forward sublime
religious and ideal teachings, but at the same time shows that all of it
can be demonstrated to reason, and that authority other than that has no
place, thus preventing the hypocrisy which arises from asserting dogmas
on authority which no one can show as resting on reason. This ancient body
of doctrine is known as the "Wisdom Religion" and was always taught
by adepts or initiates therein who preserve it through all time. Hence,
and from other doctrines demonstrated, it is shown that man, being spirit
and immortal, is able to perpetuate his real life and consciousness, and
has done so during all time in the persons of those higher flowers of the
human race who are members of an ancient and high brotherhood who concern
themselves with the soul development of man, held by them to include every
process of evolution on all planes. The initiates, being bound by the law
of evolution, must work with humanity as its development permits. Therefore
from time to time they give out again and again the same doctrine which
from time to time grows obscured in various nations and places. This is
the wisdom religion, and they are the keepers of it. At times they come
to nations as great teachers and "saviours," who only re-promulgate
the old truths and system of ethics. This therefore holds that humanity
is capable of infinite perfection both in time and quality, the saviours
and adepts being held up as examples of that possibility.
From this living and presently acting body of perfected men H.P.Blavatsky
declared she received the impulse to once more bring forward the old ideas,
and from them also received several keys to ancient and modern doctrines
that had been lost during modern struggles toward civilization, and also
that she was furnished by them with some doctrines really ancient but entirely
new to the present day in any exoteric shape. These she wrote among the
other keys furnished by her to her fellow members and the world at large.
Added, then, to the testimony through all time found in records of all nations
we have this modern explicit assertion that the ancient learned and humanitarian
body of adepts still exists on this earth and takes an interest in the development
of the race.
Theosophy postulates an eternal principle called
the unknown, which can never be cognized except through its manifestations.
This eternal principle is in and is every thing and being; it periodically
and eternally manifests itself and recedes again from manifestation. In
this ebb and flow evolution proceeds and itself is the progress of the manifestation.
The perceived universe is the manifestation of this unknown, including spirit
and matter, for Theosophy holds that those are but the two opposite poles
of the one unknown principle. They coexist, are not separate nor separable
from each other, or, as the Hindu scriptures say, there is no particle of
matter without spirit, and no particle of spirit without matter. In manifesting
itself the spirit-matter differentiates on seven planes, each more dense
on the way down to the plane of our senses than its predecessor, the substance
in all being the same only differing in degree. Therefore from this view
the whole universe is alive, not one atom of it being in any sense dead.
It is also conscious and intelligent, its consciousness and intelligence
being present on all planes though obscured on this one. On this plane of
ours the spirit focalizes itself in all human beings who choose to permit
it to do so, and the refusal to permit it is the cause of ignorance, of
sin, of all sorrow and suffering.
In all ages some have come to this high state, have grown to be as gods,
are partakers actively in the work of nature, and go on from century to
century widening their consciousness and increasing the scope of their government
in nature. This is the destiny of all beings, and hence at the outset Theosophy
postulates this perfectibility of the race, removes the idea of innate unregenerable
wickedness, and offers a purpose and an aim for life which is consonant
with the longings of the soul and with its real nature, tending at the same
time to destroy pessimism with its companion, despair.
In Theosophy the world is held to be the product of the evolution of
the principle spoken of from the very lowest first forms of life guided
as it proceeded by intelligent perfected beings from other and older evolutions,
and compounded also of the egos or individual spirits for and by whom it
emanates. Hence man as we know him is held to be a conscious spirit, the
flower of evolution, with other and lower classes of egos below him in the
lower kingdoms, all however coming up and destined one day to be on the
same human stage as we now are, we then being higher still. Man's consciousness
being thus more perfect is able to pass from one to another of the planes
of differentiation mentioned. If he mistakes any one of them for the reality
that he is in his essence, he is deluded; the object of evolution then is
to give him complete self-consciousness so that he may go on to higher stages
in the progress of the universe. His evolution after coming on the human
stage is for the getting of experience, and in order to so raise up and
purify the various planes of matter with which he has to do, that the voice
of the spirit may be fully heard and comprehended.
He is a religious being because he is a spirit encased in matter, which
is in turn itself spiritual in essence. Being a spirit he requires vehicles
with which to come in touch with all the planes of nature included in evolution,
and it is these vehicles that make of him an intricate, composite being,
liable to error, but at the same time able to rise above all delusions and
conquer the highest place. He is in miniature the universe, for he is as
spirit, manifesting himself to himself by means of seven differentiations.
Therefore is he known in Theosophy as a sevenfold being. The Christian division
of body, soul, and spirit is accurate so far as it goes, but will not answer
to the problems of life and nature, unless, as is not the case, those three
divisions are each held to be composed of others, which would raise the
possible total to seven. The spirit stands alone at the top, next comes
the spiritual soul or Buddhi as it is called in Sanskrit. This partakes
more of the spirit than any below it, and is connected with Manas or mind,
these three being the real trinity of man, the imperishable part, the real
thinking entity living on the earth in the other and denser vehicles by
its evolution. Below in order of quality is the plane of the desires and
passions shared with the animal kingdom, unintelligent, and the producer
of ignorance flowing from delusion. It is distinct from the will and judgment,
and must therefore be given its own place. On this plane is gross life,
manifesting, not as spirit from which it derives its essence, but as energy
and motion on this plane. It being common to the whole objective plane and
being everywhere, is also to be classed by itself, the portion used by man
being given up at the death of the body. Then last, before the objective
body, is the model or double of the outer physical case. This double is
the astral body belonging to the astral plane of matter, not so dense as
physical molecules, but more tenuous and much stronger, as well as lasting.
It is the original of the body permitting the physical molecules to arrange
and show themselves thereon, allowing them to go and come from day to day
as they are known to do, yet ever retaining the fixed shape and contour
given by the astral double within. These lower four principles or sheaths
are the transitory perishable part of man, not himself, but in every sense
the instrument he uses, given up at the hour of death like an old garment,
and rebuilt out of the general reservoir at every new birth. The trinity
is the real man, the thinker, the individuality that passes from house to
house, gaining experience at each rebirth, while it suffers and enjoys according
to its deeds - it is the one central man, the living spirit-soul.
Now this spiritual man, having always existed, being intimately concerned
in evolution, dominated by the law of cause and effect, because in himself
he is that very law, showing moreover on this plane varieties of force of
character, capacity, and opportunity, his very presence must be explained,
while the differences noted have to be accounted for. The doctrine of reincarnation
does all this. It means that man as a thinker, composed of soul, mind and
spirit, occupies body after body in life after life on the earth which is
the scene of his evolution, and where he must, under the very laws of his
being, complete that evolution, once it has been begun. In any one life
he is known to others as a personality, but in the whole stretch of eternity
he is one individual, feeling in himself an identity not dependent on name,
form, or recollection.
This doctrine is the very base of Theosophy, for it explains life and
nature. It is one aspect of evolution, for as it is re-embodiment in meaning,
and as evolution could not go on without re-embodiment, it is evolution
itself, as applied to the human soul. But it is also a doctrine believed
in at the time given to Jesus and taught in the early ages of Christianity,
being now as much necessary to that religion as it is to any other to explain
texts, to reconcile the justice of God with the rough and merciless aspect
of nature and life to most mortals, and to throw a light perceptible by
reason on all the problems that vex us in our journey through this world.
The vast, and under any other doctrine unjust, difference between the savage
and the civilized man as to both capacity, character, and opportunity can
be understood only through this doctrine, and coming to our own stratum
the differences of the same kind may only thus be explained. It vindicates
Nature and God, and removes from religion the blot thrown by men who have
postulated creeds which paint the creator as a demon. Each man's life and
character are the outcome of his previous lives and thoughts. Each is his
own judge, his own executioner, for it is his own hand that forges the weapon
which works for his punishment, and each by his own life reaches reward,
rises to heights of knowledge and power for the good of all who may be left
behind him. Nothing is left to chance, favor, or partiality, but all is
under the governance of law. Man is a thinker, and by his thoughts he makes
the causes for woe or bliss; for his thoughts produce his acts. He is the
centre for any disturbance of the universal harmony, and to him as the centre
the disturbance must return so as to bring about equilibrium, for nature
always works towards harmony. Man is always carrying on a series of thoughts,
which extend back to the remote past, continually making action and reaction.
He is thus responsible for all his thoughts and acts, and in that his complete
responsibility is established; his own spirit is the essence of this law
and provides for ever compensation for every disturbance and adjustment
for all effects. This is the law of Karma or justice, sometimes called the
ethical law of causation. It is not foreign to the Christian scriptures,
for both Jesus and St. Paul clearly enunciated it. Jesus said we should
be judged as we gave judgment and should receive the measure meted to others.
St. Paul said: "Brethren, be not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever
a man soweth that also shall he reap." And that sowing and reaping
can only be possible under the doctrines of Karma and reincarnation.
But what of death and after? Is heaven a place or is it not? Theosophy
teaches, as may be found in all sacred books, that after death the soul
reaps a rest. This is from its own nature. It is a thinker, and cannot during
life fulfil and carry out all nor even a small part of the myriads of thoughts
entertained. Hence when at death it casts off the body and the astral body,
and is released from the passions and desires, its natural forces have immediate
sway and it thinks its thoughts out on the soul plane, clothed in a finer
body suitable to that existence. This is called Devachan. It is the very
state that has brought about the descriptions of heaven common to all religions,
but this doctrine is very clearly put in the Buddhist and Hindu religions.
It is a time of rest, because the physical body being absent the consciousness
is not in the completer touch with visible nature which is possible on the
material plane. But it is a real existence, and no more illusionary than
earth life; it is where the essence of the thoughts of life that were as
high as character permitted, expands and is garnered by the soul and mind.
When the force of these thoughts is fully exhausted the soul is drawn back
once more to earth, to that environment which is sufficiently like unto
itself to give it the proper further evolution. This alternation from state
to state goes on until the being rises from repeated experiences above ignorance,
and realizes in itself the actual unity of all spiritual beings. Then it
passes on to higher and greater steps on the evolutionary road.
No new ethics are presented by Theosophy, as it is held that right ethics
are for ever the same. But in the doctrines of Theosophy are to be found
the philosophical and reasonable basis for ethics and the natural enforcement
of them in practice. Universal brotherhood is that which will result in
doing unto others as you would have them do unto you, and in your loving
your neighbour as yourself - declared as right by all teachers in the great
religions of the world.
WILLIAM Q JUDGE
Lucifer, December, 1893
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